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this post was submitted on 23 Sep 2024
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Sure, but which of these factors do you think were relevant to the case in the article? The AI seems to have had a large corpus of documents relating to the reporter. Those articles presumably stated clearly that he was the reporter and not the defendant. We are left with "incorrect assumptions made by the model". What kind of assumption would that be?
In fact, all of the results are hallucinations. It's just that some of them happen to be good answers and others are not. Instead of labelling the bad answers as hallucinations, we should be labelling the good ones as confirmation bias.
It was an incorrect assumption based on his name being in the article. It should have listed him as the author only, not a part of the cases.
That is the error that the model made. Your quote talks about the causes of these errors. I asked what caused the model to make this error.